Return of the first-time buyer: Numbers reach five-year high as 216,000 take their first step on property ladder this year

Return of the first-time buyer: Numbers reach five-year high as 216,000 take their first step on property ladder this yearNumber of first-time buyers increase by 12 per cent First-time buyers are getting older and put down bigger deposits than before

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UPDATED:

00:01 GMT, 29 December 2012

First-time home buyer numbers reached a five-year high in 2012, helped by improvements in affordability, a study has found.

However, the average age of a first-time buyer has increased to 30, from 29 a year ago, and the typical deposit required is 20 per cent, compared with the deposit of around 10 per cent put down in 2007, Halifax found.

Around 216,000 people took their first step on the property ladder in 2012, showing a 12 per cent year-on-year increase and making up two fifths of all house purchase loans.

Property booming: The number of first-time buyers have increased with 12 per cent since last year

While this is the highest number since 2007, it is still almost half the 402,800 first-time buyers who bought their first home in 2006.

Halifax said that improved mortgage affordability was a factor behind the recent increase. A new first-time buyer spends around 27 per cent of their disposable income on their mortgage payments, which is comfortably below the long-term average of 34 per cent.

However, the average house price paid by a first-time buyer increased slightly to 139,921 in 2012 – representing a 3 per cent rise compared with 2011.

Halifax found that the average price paid by a first-time buyer in November was affordable for someone on average earnings in 39 per cent of local authority districts in the UK, compared with just 5 per cent in 2007. Homes were classed as affordable if they cost less than four times typical local earnings.

Aging buyers: The average age for a first-time buyer has increased to 30, from 29 last year, and to 32 in the capital

Stirling in Scotland was named as the most affordable district, where house prices are around two and-a-half times earnings.

At the other end of the scale, first-time buyers in Camden, London, face buying a home which costs nine times the average wage.

The vast majority of local authority districts which were deemed affordable in the UK were outside the South of England.

Just 5 per cent of the affordable districts were located in the South, where house prices tend to have held up to a greater extent, and 95 per cent were spread elsewhere in England or in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland.

The North West was found to be the most affordable region in Britain, with 88 per cent of local authority districts there found to be affordable.

London was the area most out of buyers' reach, with 100% of districts there deemed unaffordable.

A typical first-time buyer in London, where the market has remained relatively strong, is two years older than the national average, at 32 years old, Halifax said.

First-time buyers in London put down the largest average deposit, at 62,356, while those in the north put down the smallest, at 14,936. The average deposit needed across the UK is 27,984.

The number of mortgages on the market has increased by around a fifth since a multibillion-pound Government scheme was launched in August to kick-start lending to firms and households. The scheme has also led to mortgage lenders slashing their rates, although much of the strongest competition so far has been aimed at borrowers with larger deposits.

To afford or not afford: The house price divide between South England and the rest of Britain has widened

The Government also recently introduced the NewBuy scheme, which helps people to buy a new-build home with a fraction of the usual deposit.

Martin Ellis, housing economist at Halifax, said: “The number of first-time buyers has risen to a five-year high, boosted by the improvement in affordability resulting from the reductions in both house prices and mortgage rates in recent years.

“Conditions for potential first-time buyers, however, remain very difficult with problems raising the necessary deposit and concerns over the economic climate continuing to prevent many from entering the market.

“Despite some positive steps with schemes such as NewBuy, the numbers of those buying their first home remain low by recent historical standards.”

Halifax also highlighted evidence that first-time buyers have become increasingly reliant on extra help to give them a push onto the ladder.

The Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) recently estimated that 65 per cent of this sector of the market had financial assistance in mid-2012, compared with 31 per cent seven years earlier.